WC Climate Change 2018:

Impacts & Responses

Sep 13 - 15, 2018, Rome, Italy (Hotel Rome - Pisana)

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About Conference

The Organizing Committee of the World Congress on Climate Change 2018: Impacts & Responses invites you to participate in the congress, which will be held on Sept 13-15, 2018 at Rome, Italy. The conference will be the culmination of a momentous twelve months in the climate debate and needs a breakthrough in the form of a roadmap for a future climate change deal. Early in the year, scientific evidence of global warming, as set out in the fourth assessment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), put the reality of human-induced global warming beyond any doubt. What we are facing is not only an environmental problem, but has much wider implications: For economic growth, water and food security, and for people's survival - especially those living in the poorest communities in developing countries.

Climate Change 2018 is designed to bring together of leading academicians, scientists, researchers, graduate students from the field of Geosciences, geology, Meteorology, Volcanology, Atmospheric Science, Global Warming and Environmental Sciences. Discussions throughout the three days-long conference will culminate in the development of a new Action Strategy for Nature Conservation, guiding conservation efforts for the next 5 years.

Mark your calendars now and stay tuned for more information.

Latest News

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The first wave of atmospheric data from the Stratospheric Aerosol and Gas Experiment III (SAGE III), a NASA instrument that launched to the International Space Station earlier this year, is now available for public use.

Keeping an eye on Earth’s energy budget

The Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) instrument is scheduled to launch into space in a few weeks, where it will collect top-of-atmosphere data on Earth's "energy budget."

September 2017 was fourth warmest September on record

September 2017 was the fourth warmest September in 137 years of modern record-keeping, according to a monthly analysis of global temperatures by NASA scientists.

NASA pinpoints cause of Earth's recent record carbon dioxide spike

A new NASA study provides space-based evidence Earth's tropical regions were the cause of the largest annual increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide in at least 2,000 years.

ACT-America aims to tell four-season greenhouse gas story

Researchers returned to the field to measure how weather systems transport carbon dioxide and methane through the atmosphere over the eastern United States, hoping to improve our understanding of where those greenhouse gases originate